# vim:ft=zsh
#
# Based on (started as) a copy of Kitty's zsh integration. Kitty is
# distributed under GPLv3, so this file is also distributed under GPLv3.
# The license header is reproduced below:
#
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

#
# Enables integration between zsh and ghostty.
#
# This is an autoloadable function. It's invoked automatically in shells
# directly spawned by Ghostty but not in any other shells. For example, running
# `exec zsh`, `sudo -E zsh`, `tmux`, or plain `zsh` will create a shell where
# ghostty-integration won't automatically run. Zsh users who want integration with
# Ghostty in all shells should add the following lines to their .zshrc:
#
#   if [[ -n $GHOSTTY_RESOURCES_DIR ]]; then
#     source "$GHOSTTY_RESOURCES_DIR"/shell-integration/zsh/ghostty-integration
#   fi
#
# Implementation note: We can assume that alias expansion is disabled in this
# file, so no need to quote defensively. We still have to defensively prefix all
# builtins with `builtin` to avoid accidentally invoking user-defined functions.
# We avoid `function` reserved word as an additional defensive measure.

# Note that updating options with `builtin emulate -L zsh` affects the global options
# if it's called outside of a function. So nearly all code has to be in functions.
_entrypoint() {
    builtin emulate -L zsh -o no_warn_create_global -o no_aliases

    [[ -o interactive ]]              || builtin return 0  # non-interactive shell
    (( ! $+_ghostty_state ))          || builtin return 0  # already initialized

    # We require zsh 5.1+ (released Sept 2015) for features like functions_source,
    # introspection arrays, and array pattern substitution.
    if ! { builtin autoload -- is-at-least 2>/dev/null && is-at-least 5.1; }; then
        builtin echo "Zsh ${ZSH_VERSION} is too old for ghostty shell integration (5.1+ required)" >&2
        builtin return 1
    fi

    # 0: no OSC 133 [AC] marks have been written yet.
    # 1: the last written OSC 133 C has not been closed with D yet.
    # 2: none of the above.
    builtin typeset -gi _ghostty_state

    # Attempt to create a writable file descriptor to the TTY so that we can print
    # to the TTY later even when STDOUT is redirected. This code is fairly subtle.
    #
    # - It's tempting to do `[[ -t 1 ]] && exec {_ghostty_state}>&1` but we cannot do this
    #   because it'll create a file descriptor >= 10 without O_CLOEXEC. This file
    #   descriptor will leak to child processes.
    # - If we do `exec {3}>&1`, the file descriptor won't leak to the child processes
    #   but it'll still leak if the current process is replaced with another. In
    #   addition, it'll break user code that relies on fd 3 being available.
    # - Zsh doesn't expose dup3, which would have allowed us to copy STDOUT with
    #   O_CLOEXEC. The only way to create a file descriptor with O_CLOEXEC is via
    #   sysopen.
    # - `zmodload zsh/system` and `sysopen -o cloexec -wu _ghostty_fd -- /dev/tty` can
    #   fail with an error message to STDERR (the latter can happen even if /dev/tty
    #   is writable), hence the redirection of STDERR. We do it for the whole block
    #   for performance reasons (redirections are slow).
    # - We must open the file descriptor right here rather than in _ghostty_deferred_init
    #   because there are broken zsh plugins out there that run `exec {fd}< <(cmd)`
    #   and then close the file descriptor more than once while suppressing errors.
    #   This could end up closing our file descriptor if we opened it in
    #   _ghostty_deferred_init.
    typeset -gi _ghostty_fd
    {
        builtin zmodload zsh/system && (( $+builtins[sysopen] )) && {
            { [[ -w     $TTY ]] && builtin sysopen -o cloexec -wu _ghostty_fd --     $TTY } ||
            { [[ -w /dev/tty ]] && builtin sysopen -o cloexec -wu _ghostty_fd -- /dev/tty }
        }
    } 2>/dev/null || (( _ghostty_fd = 1 ))

    # Defer initialization so that other zsh init files can be configure
    # the integration.
    builtin typeset -ag precmd_functions
    precmd_functions+=(_ghostty_deferred_init)
}

_ghostty_deferred_init() {
    builtin emulate -L zsh -o no_warn_create_global -o no_aliases

    # The directory where ghostty-integration is located: /../shell-integration/zsh.
    builtin local self_dir="${functions_source[_ghostty_deferred_init]:A:h}"

    # Enable semantic markup with OSC 133.
    _ghostty_precmd() {
        builtin local -i cmd_status=$?
        builtin emulate -L zsh -o no_warn_create_global -o no_aliases

        # Don't write OSC 133 D when our precmd handler is invoked from zle.
        # Some plugins do that to update prompt on cd.
        if ! builtin zle; then
            # This code works incorrectly in the presence of a precmd or chpwd
            # hook that prints. For example, sindresorhus/pure prints an empty
            # line on precmd and marlonrichert/zsh-snap prints $PWD on chpwd.
            # We'll end up writing our OSC 133 D mark too late.
            #
            # Another failure mode is when the output of a command doesn't end
            # with LF and prompst_sp is set (it is by default). In this case
            # we'll incorrectly state that '%' from prompt_sp is a part of the
            # command's output.
            if (( _ghostty_state == 1 )); then
                # The last written OSC 133 C has not been closed with D yet.
                # Close it and supply status.
                builtin print -nu $_ghostty_fd '\e]133;D;'$cmd_status'\a'
                (( _ghostty_state = 2 ))
            elif (( _ghostty_state == 2 )); then
                # There might be an unclosed OSC 133 C. Close that.
                builtin print -nu $_ghostty_fd '\e]133;D\a'
            fi
        fi

        builtin local mark1=$'%{\e]133;A\a%}'
        if [[ -o prompt_percent ]]; then
            builtin typeset -g precmd_functions
            if [[ ${precmd_functions[-1]} == _ghostty_precmd ]]; then
                # This is the best case for us: we can add our marks to PS1 and
                # PS2. This way our marks will be printed whenever zsh
                # redisplays prompt: on reset-prompt, on SIGWINCH, and on
                # SIGCHLD if notify is set. Themes that update prompt
                # asynchronously from a `zle -F` handler might still remove our
                # marks. Oh well.
                builtin local mark2=$'%{\e]133;A;k=s\a%}'
                # Add marks conditionally to avoid a situation where we have
                # several marks in place. These conditions can have false
                # positives and false negatives though.
                #
                # - False positive (with prompt_percent): PS1="%(?.$mark1.)"
                # - False negative (with prompt_subst):   PS1='$mark1'
                [[ $PS1 == *$mark1* ]] || PS1=${mark1}${PS1}
                # PS2 mark is needed when clearing the prompt on resize
                [[ $PS2 == *$mark2* ]] || PS2=${mark2}${PS2}
                (( _ghostty_state = 2 ))
            else
                # If our precmd hook is not the last, we cannot rely on prompt
                # changes to stick, so we don't even try. At least we can move
                # our hook to the end to have better luck next time. If there is
                # another piece of code that wants to take this privileged
                # position, this won't work well. We'll break them as much as
                # they are breaking us.
                precmd_functions=(${precmd_functions:#_ghostty_precmd} _ghostty_precmd)
                # Plugins that invoke precmd hooks from zle do that before zle
                # is trashed. This means that the cursor is in the middle of
                # BUFFER and we cannot print our mark there. Prompt might
                # already have a mark, so the following reset-prompt will write
                # it. If it doesn't, there is nothing we can do.
                if ! builtin zle; then
                    builtin print -rnu $_ghostty_fd -- $mark1[3,-3]
                    (( _ghostty_state = 2 ))
                fi
            fi
        elif ! builtin zle; then
            # Without prompt_percent we cannot patch prompt. Just print the
            # mark, except when we are invoked from zle. In the latter case we
            # cannot do anything.
            builtin print -rnu $_ghostty_fd -- $mark1[3,-3]
            (( _ghostty_state = 2 ))
        fi
    }

    _ghostty_preexec() {
        builtin emulate -L zsh -o no_warn_create_global -o no_aliases

        # This can potentially break user prompt. Oh well. The robustness of
        # this code can be improved in the case prompt_subst is set because
        # it'll allow us distinguish (not perfectly but close enough) between
        # our own prompt, user prompt, and our own prompt with user additions on
        # top. We cannot force prompt_subst on the user though, so we would
        # still need this code for the no_prompt_subst case.
        PS1=${PS1//$'%{\e]133;A\a%}'}
        PS2=${PS2//$'%{\e]133;A;k=s\a%}'}

        # This will work incorrectly in the presence of a preexec hook that
        # prints. For example, if MichaelAquilina/zsh-you-should-use installs
        # its preexec hook before us, we'll incorrectly mark its output as
        # belonging to the command (as if the user typed it into zle) rather
        # than command output.
        builtin print -nu $_ghostty_fd '\e]133;C\a'
        (( _ghostty_state = 1 ))
    }

    # Enable reporting current working dir to terminal. Ghostty supports
    # the kitty-shell-cwd format.
    _ghostty_report_pwd() { builtin print -nu $_ghostty_fd '\e]7;kitty-shell-cwd://'"$HOST""$PWD"'\a'; }
    chpwd_functions=(${chpwd_functions[@]} "_ghostty_report_pwd")
    # An executed program could change cwd and report the changed cwd, so also report cwd at each new prompt
    # as in this case chpwd_functions is insufficient. chpwd_functions is still needed for things like: cd x && something
    functions[_ghostty_precmd]+="
        _ghostty_report_pwd"
    _ghostty_report_pwd

    if [[ "$GHOSTTY_SHELL_FEATURES" == *"title"* ]]; then
      # Enable terminal title changes.
      functions[_ghostty_precmd]+="
          builtin print -rnu $_ghostty_fd \$'\\e]2;'\"\${(%):-%(4~|…/%3~|%~)}\"\$'\\a'"
      functions[_ghostty_preexec]+="
          builtin print -rnu $_ghostty_fd \$'\\e]2;'\"\${(V)1}\"\$'\\a'"
    fi

    if [[ "$GHOSTTY_SHELL_FEATURES" == *"cursor"* ]]; then
      # Enable cursor shape changes depending on the current keymap.
      # This implementation leaks blinking block cursor into external commands
      # executed from zle. For example, users of fzf-based widgets may find
      # themselves with a blinking block cursor within fzf.
      _ghostty_zle_line_init _ghostty_zle_line_finish _ghostty_zle_keymap_select() {
	  case ${KEYMAP-} in
	      # Blinking block cursor.
	      vicmd|visual) builtin print -nu "$_ghostty_fd" '\e[1 q';;
	      # Blinking bar cursor.
	      *)            builtin print -nu "$_ghostty_fd" '\e[5 q';;
	  esac
      }
      # Restore the blinking default shape before executing an external command
      functions[_ghostty_preexec]+="
	  builtin print -rnu $_ghostty_fd \$'\\e[0 q'"
    fi

    # Add Ghostty binary to PATH if the path feature is enabled
    if [[ "$GHOSTTY_SHELL_FEATURES" == *"path"* ]] && [[ -n "$GHOSTTY_BIN_DIR" ]]; then
      if [[ ":$PATH:" != *":$GHOSTTY_BIN_DIR:"* ]]; then
        builtin export PATH="$PATH:$GHOSTTY_BIN_DIR"
      fi
    fi

    # Sudo
    if [[ "$GHOSTTY_SHELL_FEATURES" == *"sudo"* ]] && [[ -n "$TERMINFO" ]]; then
      # Wrap `sudo` command to ensure Ghostty terminfo is preserved
      sudo() {
        builtin local sudo_has_sudoedit_flags="no"
        for arg in "$@"; do
          # Check if argument is '-e' or '--edit' (sudoedit flags)
          if [[ "$arg" == "-e" || $arg == "--edit" ]]; then
            sudo_has_sudoedit_flags="yes"
            builtin break
          fi
          # Check if argument is neither an option nor a key-value pair
          if [[ "$arg" != -* && "$arg" != *=* ]]; then
            builtin break
          fi
        done
        if [[ "$sudo_has_sudoedit_flags" == "yes" ]]; then
          builtin command sudo "$@";
        else
          builtin command sudo TERMINFO="$TERMINFO" "$@";
        fi
      }
    fi

    # SSH Integration
    if [[ "$GHOSTTY_SHELL_FEATURES" == *ssh-* ]]; then
      ssh() {
        emulate -L zsh
        setopt local_options no_glob_subst

        local ssh_term ssh_opts
        ssh_term="xterm-256color"
        ssh_opts=()

        # Configure environment variables for remote session
        if [[ "$GHOSTTY_SHELL_FEATURES" == *ssh-env* ]]; then
          ssh_opts+=(-o "SetEnv COLORTERM=truecolor")
          ssh_opts+=(-o "SendEnv TERM_PROGRAM TERM_PROGRAM_VERSION")
        fi

        # Install terminfo on remote host if needed
        if [[ "$GHOSTTY_SHELL_FEATURES" == *ssh-terminfo* ]]; then
          local ssh_user ssh_hostname

          while IFS=' ' read -r ssh_key ssh_value; do
            case "$ssh_key" in
              user) ssh_user="$ssh_value" ;;
              hostname) ssh_hostname="$ssh_value" ;;
            esac
            [[ -n "$ssh_user" && -n "$ssh_hostname" ]] && break
          done < <(command ssh -G "$@" 2>/dev/null)

          if [[ -n "$ssh_hostname" ]]; then
            local ssh_target="${ssh_user}@${ssh_hostname}"

            # Check if terminfo is already cached
            if "$GHOSTTY_BIN_DIR/ghostty" +ssh-cache --host="$ssh_target" >/dev/null 2>&1; then
              ssh_term="xterm-ghostty"
            elif (( $+commands[infocmp] )); then
              local ssh_terminfo ssh_cpath_dir ssh_cpath

              ssh_terminfo=$(infocmp -0 -x xterm-ghostty 2>/dev/null)

              if [[ -n "$ssh_terminfo" ]]; then
                print "Setting up xterm-ghostty terminfo on $ssh_hostname..." >&2

                ssh_cpath_dir=$(mktemp -d "/tmp/ghostty-ssh-$ssh_user.XXXXXX" 2>/dev/null) || ssh_cpath_dir="/tmp/ghostty-ssh-$ssh_user.$$"
                ssh_cpath="$ssh_cpath_dir/socket"

                if print "$ssh_terminfo" | command ssh "${ssh_opts[@]}" -o ControlMaster=yes -o ControlPath="$ssh_cpath" -o ControlPersist=60s "$@" '
                  infocmp xterm-ghostty >/dev/null 2>&1 && exit 0
                  command -v tic >/dev/null 2>&1 || exit 1
                  mkdir -p ~/.terminfo 2>/dev/null && tic -x - 2>/dev/null && exit 0
                  exit 1
                ' 2>/dev/null; then
                  ssh_term="xterm-ghostty"
                  ssh_opts+=(-o "ControlPath=$ssh_cpath")

                  # Cache successful installation
                  "$GHOSTTY_BIN_DIR/ghostty" +ssh-cache --add="$ssh_target" >/dev/null 2>&1 || true
                else
                  print "Warning: Failed to install terminfo." >&2
                fi
              else
                print "Warning: Could not generate terminfo data." >&2
              fi
            else
              print "Warning: ghostty command not available for cache management." >&2
            fi
          fi
        fi

        # Execute SSH with TERM environment variable
        TERM="$ssh_term" command ssh "${ssh_opts[@]}" "$@"
      }
    fi

    # Some zsh users manually run `source ~/.zshrc` in order to apply rc file
    # changes to the current shell. This is a terrible practice that breaks many
    # things, including our shell integration. For example, Oh My Zsh and Prezto
    # (both very popular among zsh users) will remove zle-line-init and
    # zle-line-finish hooks if .zshrc is manually sourced. Prezto will also remove
    # zle-keymap-select.
    #
    # Another common (and much more robust) way to apply rc file changes to the
    # current shell is `exec zsh`. This will remove our integration from the shell
    # unless it's explicitly invoked from .zshrc. This is not an issue with
    # `exec zsh` but rather with our implementation of automatic shell integration.

    # In the ideal world we would use add-zle-hook-widget to hook zle-line-init
    # and similar widget. This breaks user configs though, so we have do this
    # horrible thing instead.
    builtin local hook func widget orig_widget flag
    for hook in line-init line-finish keymap-select; do
        func=_ghostty_zle_${hook/-/_}
        (( $+functions[$func] )) || builtin continue
        widget=zle-$hook
        if [[ $widgets[$widget] == user:azhw:* &&
              $+functions[add-zle-hook-widget] -eq 1 ]]; then
            # If the widget is already hooked by add-zle-hook-widget at the top
            # level, add our hook at the end. We MUST do it this way. We cannot
            # just wrap the widget ourselves in this case because it would
            # trigger bugs in add-zle-hook-widget.
            add-zle-hook-widget $hook $func
        else
            if (( $+widgets[$widget] )); then
                # There is a widget but it's not from add-zle-hook-widget. We
                # can rename the original widget, install our own and invoke
                # the original when we are called.
                #
                # Note: The leading dot is to work around bugs in
                # zsh-syntax-highlighting.
                orig_widget=._ghostty_orig_$widget
                builtin zle -A $widget $orig_widget
                if [[ $widgets[$widget] == user:* ]]; then
                    # No -w here to preserve $WIDGET within the original widget.
                    flag=
                else
                    flag=w
                fi
                functions[$func]+="
                    builtin zle $orig_widget -N$flag -- \"\$@\""
            fi
            builtin zle -N $widget $func
        fi
    done

    if (( $+functions[_ghostty_preexec] )); then
        builtin typeset -ag preexec_functions
        preexec_functions+=(_ghostty_preexec)
    fi

    builtin typeset -ag precmd_functions
    if (( $+functions[_ghostty_precmd] )); then
        precmd_functions=(${precmd_functions:/_ghostty_deferred_init/_ghostty_precmd})
        _ghostty_precmd
    else
        precmd_functions=(${precmd_functions:#_ghostty_deferred_init})
    fi

    # Unfunction _ghostty_deferred_init to save memory. Don't unfunction
    # ghostty-integration though because decent public functions aren't supposed to
    # to unfunction themselves when invoked. Unfunctioning is done by calling code.
    builtin unfunction _ghostty_deferred_init
}

_entrypoint
